USA TODAY International Edition

Time to vault back into investing

As inflation eases, be ready to snatch up stocks and bonds, experts say

- Medora Lee

Inflation’s finally cooling, and interest rates may be peaking soon. That means now may be the right time to jump back into the market – even with a potential recession on the horizon, some strategist­s say.

Forty- year- high inflation and the most aggressive interest rate hikes by the Federal Reserve since the 1980s pummeled people’s portfolios last year. Stocks and bonds, which normally move in opposite directions, plunged simultaneo­usly, leaving the classic diversified 60% stock/ 40% bond, or 60/ 40, portfolio in shambles and investors with nowhere to hide. Morningsta­r’s U. S. Moderate Target Allocation Index – designed as the benchmark for a 60/ 40 allocation portfolio – lost 15.3%, the biggest annual decline since 2008.

But 2023’ s on a different trajectory, offering investors hope they can start rebuilding their retirement balances, some say.

“Overall, the inflation pendulum is swinging back now,” said David Russell, vice president of market intelligen­ce at online securities and futures brokerage firm TradeStati­on. “The bond market sees it, and so does the stock market. That entire 60/ 40 strategy can go back to work, and I think we’re seeing that happen today. We’re seeing money flowing into bonds and the S& P and Nasdaq, in particular.”

What happened last year?

When inflation surged to a 40- year high, the Fed hiked last year its short- term benchmark fed funds rate by a whopping 425 basis points total, including three consecutiv­e supersized 0.75- point ones, to cool inflation. Higher rates increase the cost of borrowing for people spending and for businesses to invest in future earnings growth, which slows demand, the economy and inflation.

When interest rates jump, bond prices drop because older bonds become less valuable. Their coupon payments are now lower than those of new bonds being offered in the market at higher rates. The combinatio­n of high inflation and aggressive rate hikes set the stage for a rare occurrence: Values of stocks and bonds plunged simultaneo­usly.

“Going back to 1929, there have only been 3 years where bonds didn’t go up when stocks went down,” investment firm BlackRock wrote in a report last year. The last time it happened was 1969, it said.

“Risk is slowly coming back to normal. After three years of intense turbulence, we’re returning to equilibriu­m. It’s not a straight line, but the economy’s returning to normal.”

David Russell Vice president of market intelligen­ce at TradeStati­on

What if there’s a recession?

Maybe it won’t matter.

“There’s so much negative sentiment, it almost feels and seems like a recession has already been priced in,” said Peter Essele, Commonweal­th Financial Network’s head of portfolio management. “This has been the most overforeca­sted recession. I think people are sort of numb.”

Three- quarters of Americans already thought the economy was in a recession last fall, according to a CNN poll. The fourth- quarter AICPA Business and Industry Economic Outlook Survey showed 51% of business executives said the U. S. economy was either already in recession or would be by the new year.

Because people are already preparing for the worst, Essele says “usually, stocks bottom 60% or so way through a recession, but I think we will – or already have bottomed – a lot sooner in this one. Recent data also, some economists say, point to a slower economy but possibly, no recession or a shallow one.”

What could this mean for investors in 2023?

If inflation continues to trend lower as it has, the Fed pauses rate hikes as it’s expected to and all the bad news is priced in, it’s time to jump back into the market, some strategist­s say.

“We have better clarity of where the end game is for rates and inflation,” Essele said, and that’s what matters most. Unpredicta­bility is what roils markets, not so much the level at which the Fed stops raising rates, he said.

Also, if the economy falls into recession, the Fed could start lowering rates in the last part of 2023, which would jumpstart the economy, some strategist­s say.

What might be good investment­s?

With signs 10- year yields have peaked or are near peak, “we’ll see strength in housing stocks,” Russell said. “Home builders will be very strong. There’s very strong structural demand in the country for housing.”

He also likes steel makers and metals companies that have underperfo­rmed but could catch a tailwind from infrastruc­ture projects.

Additional­ly, “the combinatio­n of high home prices and high rates put buyers off last year, but as we see home prices fall, people will be more willing to buy with the hope that they can refinance in the future when rates are lower,” said Jon Klaff, general manager of investment platform Magnifi. A recession, he said, could kick off a drop in home prices.

Bonds are also a good bet, again, for retirement portfolios. “Now that yields are a lot higher, I think bonds have become a lot more attractive,” said Jason Kephart, director of multi- asset ratings for Morningsta­r Research.

Don’t forget diversification

Whatever you invest in, diversification is key to weather volatility in case markets move higher in fits and starts or as other strategist­s believe, the stock market hasn’t yet priced in all the bad news and has room to fall.

Morgan Stanley chief U. S. equity strategist Michael Wilson says corporate earnings forecasts are still too low, suggesting a drop in stock prices “for which most are not prepared ... the main culprit is the elevated and volatile inflationary environmen­t which is likely to play havoc with profitability.”

But this is where the traditiona­l 60/ 40 portfolio comes in handy, bullish strategist­s say. With higher bond yields this year, bonds can generate income for investors that will help insulate against any stock downturns.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON BY BILL CAMPLING/ USA TODAY NETWORK; GETTY IMAGES ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON BY BILL CAMPLING/ USA TODAY NETWORK; GETTY IMAGES

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